Regulatory policies on universal access to broadband services Interactive Workshop on Practical...

8
Regulatory policies on universal access to broadband services Interactive Workshop on Practical Strategies 8 September 2008, ITU-D Study Group 1, Geneva Andrew Dymond

Transcript of Regulatory policies on universal access to broadband services Interactive Workshop on Practical...

Regulatory policies on universal access to broadband services Interactive Workshop on Practical Strategies

8 September 2008, ITU-D Study Group 1, GenevaAndrew Dymond

Objective of presentation

Highlight a few key issues from the day

Identify related / associated practical strategies

Illustrate with country examples

Formulate opposing/alternate views

Propose & debate

Way forward? Final summary

Relationship of UAS to Broadband

UAS policy

Regional access,spread and growth of

Internet services creates demand

forbroadband

Broadband policy

Demand stimulation & supply strategy

e-government projects

price reduction measures

create investment & more opportunity

for economic delivery

Internet servicesInternet services

Broadband facilities

Broadband facilities

Converging into one policy?Converging into one policy?

Cases from this workshop (am) India

• Integrated re-casting of broadband policy, regulation and the USOF’s role into broadband access

• Use of USOF funds

USA• Inter-governmental agency collaboration to ensure broadband made available by

various means – FCC, USF, USDA

Portugal• Program energized by economic challenge – becoming competitive in the world

• Schools … schools …. schools!

• Mobile broadband as the favoured facility

Serbia• Development of a US policy through sector & demand research. Need for

broadband service identified

• Establish dual US target – Schools first broadband target in basic Scenario A

• Scenario B - Broadband to specific communities based on research outcomes

Brazil• Incumbent PSTN operators committed to extension of the backbone

• All municipalities to be connected

• All urban schools to have free broadband, under Government initiative

Dominican Republic• Needed to change the paradigm

• Various local access centre project models

• Rural connectivity programme to connect each municipal district

• Zero subsidies

Mobile banking • “Banking the un-banked” > Financial inclusion

• 85% of m-banking customers in developing countries

• Massive remittance market

• No broadband implications except capacity for growth

Cases from this workshop (pm)

Suggested topics for discussion

Are UAS and Broadband policy converging?• What are the challenges, hurdles & disadvantages for this?

Finding out the baseline information • Practical demand surveys

• Experience & lessons

Are schools the main priority for broadband?• How do we compare libraries, cybercafés, health centres?

• How should schools projects be financed?

Are UAS Funds even needed or should levies be reduced?• Obligations can be negotiated

• Licenses can have requirements

• Some competitions yield low or zero subsidies

2007 finding for GSMA …. mobile networks

Cover more than 80% of the world’s population

Global coverage and penetration indicators

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 E

Area (GSM) Wireless Penetration Population (GSM)

• Will be over 90% by 2010